The Japan Times - Canadian steel firms face turmoil after US 'stab in the back'

EUR -
AED 3.825869
AFN 76.520473
ALL 99.77592
AMD 413.061851
ANG 1.877611
AOA 949.951144
ARS 1100.412807
AUD 1.653668
AWG 1.874903
AZN 1.768293
BAM 1.963837
BBD 2.103508
BDT 126.578001
BGN 1.957605
BHD 0.392565
BIF 3047.758585
BMD 1.041613
BND 1.40987
BOB 7.198563
BRL 6.000939
BSD 1.041763
BTN 90.4777
BWP 14.42022
BYN 3.409352
BYR 20415.607744
BZD 2.092694
CAD 1.486489
CDF 2989.428562
CHF 0.950211
CLF 0.025975
CLP 996.781234
CNY 7.613199
CNH 7.612027
COP 4341.024838
CRC 527.257721
CUC 1.041613
CUP 27.602735
CVE 111.192409
CZK 25.039336
DJF 185.115613
DKK 7.458879
DOP 64.857583
DZD 141.392948
EGP 52.723269
ERN 15.62419
ETB 131.503588
FJD 2.406177
FKP 0.857859
GBP 0.835227
GEL 2.937673
GGP 0.857859
GHS 16.092993
GIP 0.857859
GMD 74.473659
GNF 9016.199081
GTQ 8.042914
GYD 218.183932
HKD 8.114121
HNL 26.748658
HRK 7.68663
HTG 136.448394
HUF 401.657815
IDR 17042.032726
ILS 3.730791
IMP 0.857859
INR 90.426924
IQD 1364.512558
IRR 43838.868149
ISK 146.586475
JEP 0.857859
JMD 164.041314
JOD 0.739025
JPY 160.821347
KES 134.368037
KGS 91.089283
KHR 4176.866598
KMF 494.296854
KPW 937.451492
KRW 1512.140537
KWD 0.321765
KYD 0.868165
KZT 525.43784
LAK 22629.034362
LBP 93328.492805
LKR 309.526691
LRD 205.666479
LSL 19.290601
LTL 3.075611
LVL 0.630061
LYD 5.114144
MAD 10.431784
MDL 19.622585
MGA 4905.995166
MKD 61.488261
MMK 3383.117224
MNT 3539.399862
MOP 8.357722
MRU 41.82058
MUR 48.744219
MVR 16.051675
MWK 1808.23946
MXN 21.324482
MYR 4.65806
MZN 66.558954
NAD 19.290797
NGN 1568.81409
NIO 38.279511
NOK 11.706086
NPR 144.765515
NZD 1.841509
OMR 0.401018
PAB 1.041778
PEN 3.868033
PGK 4.175826
PHP 60.621331
PKR 290.609708
PLN 4.160351
PYG 8197.547205
QAR 3.791992
RON 4.975678
RSD 117.075453
RUB 97.911158
RWF 1459.299309
SAR 3.906466
SBD 8.798465
SCR 14.973347
SDG 626.009022
SEK 11.298226
SGD 1.407391
SHP 0.857859
SLE 23.747584
SLL 21842.096172
SOS 595.285147
SRD 36.669993
STD 21559.278641
SVC 9.115303
SYP 13543.04753
SZL 19.291036
THB 35.36239
TJS 11.381733
TMT 3.65606
TND 3.325849
TOP 2.439562
TRY 37.605258
TTD 7.068027
TWD 34.186739
TZS 2708.192431
UAH 43.581752
UGX 3832.684674
USD 1.041613
UYU 45.144748
UZS 13540.9639
VES 63.486707
VND 26628.827142
VUV 123.662344
WST 2.917377
XAF 658.652434
XAG 0.03226
XAU 0.000359
XCD 2.815011
XDR 0.797664
XOF 661.944647
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.215673
ZAR 19.245804
ZMK 9375.781784
ZMW 29.14469
ZWL 335.398845
  • RBGPF

    1.8700

    66.72

    +2.8%

  • VOD

    0.0900

    8.59

    +1.05%

  • BCC

    -4.5600

    118.76

    -3.84%

  • RIO

    0.4000

    62.05

    +0.64%

  • RYCEF

    0.0600

    7.67

    +0.78%

  • GSK

    0.0750

    36.145

    +0.21%

  • RELX

    0.1250

    51.455

    +0.24%

  • BP

    0.1450

    34.695

    +0.42%

  • CMSD

    -0.1670

    23.723

    -0.7%

  • SCS

    -0.0400

    11.94

    -0.34%

  • NGG

    -0.9250

    60.555

    -1.53%

  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.33

    -0.56%

  • AZN

    1.7000

    74.43

    +2.28%

  • BCE

    0.3850

    23.265

    +1.65%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.84

    -0.23%

  • BTI

    0.1900

    42.71

    +0.44%

Canadian steel firms face turmoil after US 'stab in the back'
Canadian steel firms face turmoil after US 'stab in the back' / Photo: Cole BURSTON - AFP

Canadian steel firms face turmoil after US 'stab in the back'

When Shale Tobe heard President Donald Trump planned to impose tariffs on Canadian steel, a product that has supported his family for decades, he was in New York on holiday, "spending money down in the US."

Text size:

"I'll have second thoughts about that" now, he told AFP on the warehouse floor of North York Iron, a family-owned steel distribution business in Toronto started by his great-uncle more than 60 years ago.

Trump's latest tariff order has sparked fresh anger among Canadians, including business owners like Tobe who deal with US counterparts on a near-daily basis.

"They're like brothers to us," he said of US steel firms.

"Things have been running smoothly, going back and forth across the borders for decades... We're being stabbed in the back a bit, I feel."

Trump's pronouncements on US-Canada trade have veered in several directions.

He has promised a blanket 25 percent tariff on all Canadian imports -- measures the president says are necessary to force action on migrant crossings and the drug fentanyl, even if neither is a significant issue at the northern border -- but also complained about trade deficits.

His separate 25 percent tariffs on worldwide steel and aluminum imports are due to take effect next month.

If the metal duties come into force, Canada will be hit harder than any other nation, said Fraser Johnson, a supply-chain expert at Western University's Ivey Business School.

"It's going to be very disruptive," he told AFP, noting that about 90 percent of Canada's steel and aluminum exports go to the United States.

Beyond damage to Canadian steel and aluminum manufacturers, US customers will also suffer a swift and enduring hit, Johnson said.

"The burden will be felt almost immediately because the US does not have the domestic capacity to be able to support its entire needs," he added, suggesting it could take "decades" for US suppliers to fully adjust to a loss of sourcing from Canada.

- Waiting on retaliation -

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has condemned any US tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum as "entirely unjustified" and promised a "firm" response, but Ottawa has not yet announced retaliatory measures.

"We're not looking to go ahead of the United States," Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc said Wednesday during a visit to Washington.

Canada is "certainly not going to do anything before the Americans make their ultimate decision, and what the Americans have said to us privately and what they've said publicly is that we have a number of weeks to work together."

Trudeau, who leaves office next month, has stressed Canadian trade policy in the volatile Trump era must prioritize averting US tariffs while positioning Canada for a fundamentally altered relationship with its southern neighbor over the long term.

Canadian business leaders and politicians have urged the removal of restrictions preventing trade between provinces, to boost domestic economic activity, while expanding trade with foreign markets.

Johnson, the supply-chain expert, agreed that encouraging Canadian businesses to sell more to each other was essential, regardless of what happens in the United States.

But he stressed that when it comes to metal exports, pivoting to foreign markets is "easy to say from an armchair perspective, but difficult to be able to implement."

- 'Sickening' -

For Tobe, it's too early to assess the impacts of a metals trade war on his business.

One of his top sellers is a steel beam, which he buys from a supplier in Georgia.

The beams aren't available in Canada, so he would expect Ottawa to include an exemption for the product in any retaliation package, as they did during Trump's first term.

His company no longer exports directly to the US but his customers do, so the ripple effects of a tariff battle across the industry could eventually sting.

Beyond the family business, the softly spoken 61-year-old told AFP he has been particularly impacted by threats from Trump and his allies suggesting the United States should annex Canada.

"It was almost sickening to me, hearing that," Tobe said.

"We have to fight fire with fire... We have to get away from our dependence on the US. It's not safe anymore."

K.Okada--JT